Perhaps not to you, but to me, words mean something. "We don't need someone who's a number 1 option in REALITY, or in his own mind." Now exactly what does that mean to you? In reality means you have a player that IS a number 1 option, AKA, LeBron James, Gerald Wallace, Kobe Bryant, Brandon Roy, Carmelo Anthony, etc. All number one options in reality. And Westphal in that statement is saying he doesn't need them.
Now that may not be confusing to you, and if not perhaps you should try out for the starting SF position. But to me it doesn't make any sense. He may not have intended to say exactly what he said, but thats his problem, not mine. Please don't tell me to just discard what happened last year, and the decisions Westphal made with his starting lineup, because those decisions reflect on the coach, and some of those decisions were bad one's. He started Mason, a player that was obviously washed up and May, a player that had proved absolutely nothing, over young promising players he was suspossed to be developing. It wasn't about how long the experiment lasted. Its about whether the experiment should have happened in the first place.
My hope was that this year would be different. I'm not one that likes confusion. Call it a flaw if you will. But I like things in their proper place. Confusion leads to disorganization. Doubt! And in some cases, an eventual lack of confidence, either in your coach, or yourself. Say what you will about Rick Adelman, but you knew who was going to be in the starting lineup every night, barring injury, and who would be in the rotation. The players knew what was expected of them, and they didn't get benched the minute they made a mistake.
Now having ranted, this is just pre-season. I'm hopeful that there's a master plan behind all this, and that I'm just ranting to create more carbon dioxide. But if this continues into the regular season, like last year, then I guarantee Global warming will be increased.
As an aside: I've watched sports for over 50 years. I also played at a very high level at one time. I've had the privilge of knowing some very good players in various sports. One common denonimator that all great coaches have, is that they all adjust their philosophy to the talent they have available, and not the other way around. You can't put a square peg in a round hole. You can't be a phyiscal team with a bunch of Spencer Hawes on it. By the same token you can't be a running team with a bunch of slow footed players. When Riley was with the Lakers it was showtime. Up and down the court. Great passing etc. But he had the players to do that. When he went to the Knicks, he didn't have those kind of players. So he developed a team that was physical and that played great defense.
You can't turn a Sow's ear into a silk purse. So you have to find a way to use a Sow's ear. My point is, that if the perfect SF that Westphal is looking for isn't there, then he needs to take the best player he has at that position and figure out how to adjust his defense and offense to best utilize the talents of that player. Thats what good coaches do!